srtiwari
Daktari
I know many people here like grain in their images- I am, unfortunately, not one of them, but cannot seem to get away from it. In fact, I envy those on RFF who produce beautiful images with very acceptable grain (size and shape). But I cannot seem to achieve this. Despite trying various combinations that seem to work for many - Acros/Rodinal, Tri-X /D76, TMax400/TMax etc., I end up with too much grain. I have tried various things, such as meticulous temperature control, distilled water, minimal agitation, fresh developer, and many scanner adjustments, all without much success. I use a nikon 9000 + Vuescan, and have a Epson V700 if I need, but cannot quite get it all right. And I'm not talking about pixel peeping at 100% magnification, either. I just want to be able to make prints as large as 8x10 from my 35mm, and 20x30 off of my MF gear, without objectionable grain.
What is even more ironic, is that I have negatives from the mid 1950s taken by a relative with a Rolleiflex TLR, that shows beautifully smooth, grainless tonality. Of course, I have no idea what film/developer combo they used. But, mine cannot be a scanning problem, since I can scan and print this negative very happily.
Amongst other things, I have considered actually asking one of our RFF experts for training in person, or, alternatively, selling all my 35mm and MF gear, and going fully digital, but I keep coming across wonderful film images on RFF that keep me trying to work this out.
Aside from continuing to try, is there any other advice anyone can give me ? Any tips or tricks ? I keep thinking there is something fundamental I'm not doing correctly. I'd appreciate any ideas anyone would have.
What is even more ironic, is that I have negatives from the mid 1950s taken by a relative with a Rolleiflex TLR, that shows beautifully smooth, grainless tonality. Of course, I have no idea what film/developer combo they used. But, mine cannot be a scanning problem, since I can scan and print this negative very happily.
Amongst other things, I have considered actually asking one of our RFF experts for training in person, or, alternatively, selling all my 35mm and MF gear, and going fully digital, but I keep coming across wonderful film images on RFF that keep me trying to work this out.
Aside from continuing to try, is there any other advice anyone can give me ? Any tips or tricks ? I keep thinking there is something fundamental I'm not doing correctly. I'd appreciate any ideas anyone would have.


